But just when you thought the revelations might be relenting, Museum of London Archaeology is about to send a shiver down the spine again. In 2006, the diggers set in on a burial ground at the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel and unearthed a “confusing mix” of bones.

Sawn-off shoulders and vertebrae punctured by pins lay alongside animal skeletons and amputated limbs. The evidence suggested autopsies, anatomical dissection and finds from the notorious trade in dead bodies around the time of the 1832 Anatomy Act, when the state received the right to take unidentified bodies without consent.

Of the stories arising from the period, the cases of the “unclaimed” deceased sound the saddest: the poorest members of society often died without family members knowing or being around to grieve for them. Often the relatives left behind were too poor to bury them.

Conversely, resurrectionists found a lucrative business in trading – one of the figures portrayed by the display, William Millard, started out studying bodies as a popular teacher. He ultimately died in prison after being convicted of trying to steal a corpse from the site, leaving his wife to issue pamphlets in a bid to clear his posthumous name.

The ethical implications of the Act are a starting point for some soul-searching, but there’s likely to be less delicacy in the human and animal remains, anatomical models and drawings and practices from an era when supply could never meet anatomical demand.

The museum’s in-depth collection should offer new perspectives rather than the final word.